For Better Or Worse, YouTube Now Adapts To Multiple Aspect Ratios

To anyone whose YouTube pages started to look strange today, you’re not alone: With little fanfare, the site pushed a change that now adapts its video player to match the aspect ratio of your content.

Until now YouTube forced all videos into a 16:9 ratio by windowboxing them, meaning it surrounded them with black vertical or horizontal bars like the old days of watching widescreen movies on VHS. In that sense, this isn’t a huge change — white space instead of black — although the location of player controls moves to fit the video’s size.

This sometimes subtle and other times dramatic UX change wasn’t announced on the platform’s official channels, and only received an easy-to-miss reply on Google’s Product Forums from a Community Manager earlier today. The post YouTube replied to asked pleadingly: “For some reason, today my YouTube video player size became huge. It looks terrible and very jarring and I want to change it back. How??????”

The aspect adjustments are apparently automatic and retroactive to all uploaded video. A YouTube spokesperson has clarified to Gizmodo that currently there is no way to disable this feature.

Interestingly, the new aspect ratios also shift the positions of several key site features. Accommodations for ultra-widescreen videos make description text, channel names and subscription buttons more prominent; square of vertical ones push that information lower on the page.

Given the necessity of audience growth to YouTuber’s careers it’s possible this will become an exploitable feature.

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